US tables resolution to call 1971 Pakistan atrocities on Bengali Hindus genocide
Code-named ‘‘Operation Searchlight,’’ Pakistan Army's crackdown in 1971 involved widespread massacre of civilians, said the resolution.
PTI
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Greg Landsman is a Democrat Congressman from Ohio (X@RepGregLandsman)
Washington, 22 Mar
US Congressman Greg Landsman has introduced a resolution in
the US House of Representatives seeking to recognise the atrocities committed
by the Pakistani Army and its allies, Jamaat-e-Islami, against Bengali Hindus
on 25 March, 1971, as “war crimes and genocide”.
Landsman, a Democrat Congressman from Ohio, moved the
resolution in the US House of Representatives on Friday, and it has been
referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs.
The resolution states that on the night of March 25, 1971,
the Government of Pakistan imprisoned Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, and its military
units, in conjunction with radical Islamist groups inspired by the ideology of
Jamaat-e-Islami, began a general crackdown throughout East Pakistan code-named
‘‘Operation Searchlight’’ that involved widespread massacres of civilians.
It said that on March 28, 1971, United States Consul General
in Dacca, Archer Blood, sent a telegram to Washington titled ‘‘Selective
Genocide’’, in which he wrote, ‘‘Moreover, with support of Pak military,
non-Bengali Muslims are systematically attacking poor people’s quarters and
murdering Bengalis and Hindus’’.
Landsman noted that on April 6, 1971, in what became known
as the ‘‘Blood Telegram’’, Consul General Blood sent an objection to the
official United States Government silence on the conflict, signed by 20 members
of the Consulate General Dacca.
‘‘But we have chosen not to intervene, even morally, on the
grounds that the Awami conflict, in which unfortunately the overworked term
genocide is applicable, is purely an internal matter of a sovereign state,” the
then diplomat said in the telegram.
The resolution moved by Landsman urges the House of
Representatives to condemn the atrocities committed by the Armed Forces of
Pakistan against the people of Bangladesh on March 25, 1971.
The resolution “recognizes that while the Pakistani Army and
its Islamist allies indiscriminately mass-murdered ethnic Bengalis regardless
of their religion and gender, killed their political leaders, intellectuals,
professionals, and students, and forced tens of thousands of women to serve as
their sex slaves.”
“They specifically targeted the religious minority Hindus for extermination through mass slaughtering, gangrape, conversion, and forcible
expulsion,” it added.
Noting that entire ethnic groups or religious communities
are not responsible for the crimes committed by their members, the resolution
calls on the President of the United States to recognise the atrocities
committed against ethnic Bengali Hindus by the Armed Forces of Pakistan during
1971 and their allies in the Jamaat-e-Islami as crimes against humanity, war
crimes, and genocide.
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